Israeli cybersecurity firm Cato Networks has agreed to acquire Aim Security, an Israeli startup focused on protecting organizations that adopt generative technologies. The company framed the move as its first acquisition and said the addition will enable Cato to expand into the growing field of artificial intelligence security. Bloomberg reported the transaction and Cato linked to that coverage on its news page.
Cato described Aim Security as a specialist in defending customers from risks tied to embracing generative artificial intelligence. Company officials said the acquisition will allow Cato to extend its security offerings to address threats created by new artificial intelligence use cases, without providing financial terms or a timeline in the post on the company site. The article notes both companies are based in Israel and positions the deal as a strategic entry for Cato into the artificial intelligence security market.
The announcement on Cato’s site is brief and directs readers to Bloomberg for additional reporting. Beyond confirming the agreement and its strategic rationale, the post contains no further operational details about Aim Security’s products, personnel changes, integration plans, or the expected customer impact. For now, the key facts available are the parties involved, the stated goal of strengthening artificial intelligence security, and that this marks Cato’s first acquisition as disclosed in the company’s news item.